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Main Authors: Maan, Pranshu, Chen, Yuheng, Borneman, Sean, Lawrie, Benjamin, Puretzky, Alexander, Alaeian, Hadiseh, Boltasseva, Alexandra, Shalaev, Vladimir M., Kildishev, Alexander V.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.02638
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author Maan, Pranshu
Chen, Yuheng
Borneman, Sean
Lawrie, Benjamin
Puretzky, Alexander
Alaeian, Hadiseh
Boltasseva, Alexandra
Shalaev, Vladimir M.
Kildishev, Alexander V.
author_facet Maan, Pranshu
Chen, Yuheng
Borneman, Sean
Lawrie, Benjamin
Puretzky, Alexander
Alaeian, Hadiseh
Boltasseva, Alexandra
Shalaev, Vladimir M.
Kildishev, Alexander V.
contents Large-scale quantum systems require optical coherence between distant quantum devices, necessitating spectral indistinguishability. Scalable solid-state platforms offer promising routes to this goal. However, environmental disorders, including dephasing, spectral diffusion, and spin-bath interactions, influence the emitters' spectra and deteriorate the coherence. Using statistical theory, we identify correlations in spectral diffusion from slowly varying environmental coupling, revealing predictable dynamics extendable to other disorders. Importantly, this could enable the development of an anticipatory framework for forecasting and decoherence engineering in remote quantum emitters. To validate this framework, we demonstrate that a machine learning model trained on limited data can accurately forecast unseen spectral behavior. Realization of such a model on distinct quantum emitters could reduce the spectral shift by factors $\approx$ 2.1 to 15.8, depending on emitter stability, compared to no prediction. This work presents, for the first time, the application of anticipatory systems and replica theory to quantum technology, along with the first experimental demonstration of internal prediction that generalizes across multiple quantum emitters. These results pave the way for real-time decoherence engineering in scalable quantum systems. Such capability could lead to enhanced optical coherence and multi-emitter synchronization, with broad implications for quantum communication, computation, imaging, and sensing.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2508_02638
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Anticipating Decoherence for Enhancing Coherence in Quantum Systems
Maan, Pranshu
Chen, Yuheng
Borneman, Sean
Lawrie, Benjamin
Puretzky, Alexander
Alaeian, Hadiseh
Boltasseva, Alexandra
Shalaev, Vladimir M.
Kildishev, Alexander V.
Quantum Physics
Large-scale quantum systems require optical coherence between distant quantum devices, necessitating spectral indistinguishability. Scalable solid-state platforms offer promising routes to this goal. However, environmental disorders, including dephasing, spectral diffusion, and spin-bath interactions, influence the emitters' spectra and deteriorate the coherence. Using statistical theory, we identify correlations in spectral diffusion from slowly varying environmental coupling, revealing predictable dynamics extendable to other disorders. Importantly, this could enable the development of an anticipatory framework for forecasting and decoherence engineering in remote quantum emitters. To validate this framework, we demonstrate that a machine learning model trained on limited data can accurately forecast unseen spectral behavior. Realization of such a model on distinct quantum emitters could reduce the spectral shift by factors $\approx$ 2.1 to 15.8, depending on emitter stability, compared to no prediction. This work presents, for the first time, the application of anticipatory systems and replica theory to quantum technology, along with the first experimental demonstration of internal prediction that generalizes across multiple quantum emitters. These results pave the way for real-time decoherence engineering in scalable quantum systems. Such capability could lead to enhanced optical coherence and multi-emitter synchronization, with broad implications for quantum communication, computation, imaging, and sensing.
title Anticipating Decoherence for Enhancing Coherence in Quantum Systems
topic Quantum Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.02638